This section contains 9,500 words (approx. 32 pages at 300 words per page) |
Dictionary of Literary Biography on Fay Weldon
[This entry was updated by Margaret E. Mitchell (University of Connecticut) from the entry by Harriet Blodgett (California State University, Stanislaus) in the Concise Dictionary of British Literary Biography, volume 8, pp. 413-424.]
Fay Weldon, who is also a successful stage, radio, and television playwright, established her reputation as a novelist by writing tart, intelligent, and often comic fictions about the lives and natures of women. A satirist with a sharp sense of the ridiculous, adept at wry humor and witty prose, she has the feminist urge to improve women's attitudes towards themselves and their sisters and an imagination fertile in finding unusual embodiments for her independent attitudes and unsentimental values.
Born in the village of Alvechurch in Worcestershire, Weldon was to continue a family tradition with her writing. Her father, Frank Thornton Birkinshaw, was a physician, but her mother, Margaret Jepson Birkinshaw, published two light novels in the...
This section contains 9,500 words (approx. 32 pages at 300 words per page) |